World News in Esperanto
komenstanto, 2012 m. kovas 2 d.
Žinutės: 45
Kalba: English
komenstanto (Rodyti profilį) 2012 m. kovas 5 d. 19:35:45
Evildela (Rodyti profilį) 2012 m. kovas 5 d. 22:01:34
erinja:People are willing to pay for something if they can't find a better version for free.Than logically, we can't expect many good Esperanto news websites.
People can find, in their native languages, better quality news than they could pay for in Esperanto. So why pay? I wouldn't.
erinja (Rodyti profilį) 2012 m. kovas 5 d. 22:27:40
We don't have many good ones. And the only ones that have any kind of quality are pretty limited in content. It takes time and money to produce quality, and there isn't really a lot of money in Esperanto.
komenstanto (Rodyti profilį) 2012 m. kovas 5 d. 23:19:01
sudanglo (Rodyti profilį) 2012 m. kovas 6 d. 12:07:08
there isn't really a lot of money in Esperanto.Absolutely. I've never seen Esperantists' Rolls-Royces parked outside the kongresejo. Why not?
There's a lot of money around though in the world at large. I keep reading about how a tiny fraction of the American population have a vastly disproportionate share of the wealth. A couple of these billionaires could easily finance a whole range of projects.
The trouble is that Esperanto has always seemed to attract a particular sort of person - eccentric lefties, and other assorted bleeding hearts, all with a poor fashion sense.
Esperanto should be for everybody - including the super-rich, the dictators of tin-pot countries, hedge-fund managers, minor aristocracy, fashion models, and even right-wing nationalists. But these groups are very poorly represented at the moment.
komenstanto (Rodyti profilį) 2012 m. kovas 6 d. 18:06:19
Here is a list of rich and "smart" Deutsche Bank employees. Maybe they will give us some money if we "hit" them up:
http://fundrace.huffingtonpost.com/neighbors.php...
Note that names like Bausano are actually American citizens. Keep hitting next at the bottom and the list of potential donors goes on...Deutsche Bank likes Romney for President eh, as if he wasnt already superrich! That site is fun. Just put in a new bank for workplace and see all the donations. The only thing I have donated to is "Close the School of Americas" campaign.
Do you think it is possible to write letters asking these people for money, since it gives their addresses?
Wilhelm (Rodyti profilį) 2012 m. kovas 6 d. 20:04:26
erinja:People are willing to pay for something if they can't find a better version for free.In my opinion, international news, in English, though massive, is of relatively poor quality and usually gives voice to the opinions of the small elite who happen to speak English.
People can find, in their native languages, better quality news than they could pay for in Esperanto. So why pay? I wouldn't.
I would like to read articles from local presses around the world, concerning both local and international news.
Or something like a wiki where people can translate articles from their local presses would be great.
Sincerely,
William.
Wilhelm (Rodyti profilį) 2012 m. kovas 6 d. 20:09:41
komenstanto:What you need to find is some old rich guy who really hates his family and wants to screw them over in his will by giving his fortune away to some crazy cause.
Here is a list of rich and "smart" Deutsche Bank employees. Maybe they will give us some money if we "hit" them up:
That "crazy cause" could be Esperanto.
komenstanto (Rodyti profilį) 2012 m. kovas 6 d. 23:09:01
Wilhelm:I am surprised there are not more rich people supporting Esperanto! It's news to me. I assumed there was to some extent. I actually knew an old rich guy from British Colombia, but he was a Scottish-loving bugger and only cared for proper British English, though originally not even a Canadian but from Los Angeles. I am suspicious of Americans who move to Canada sometimes. They become royalists. He thought space aliens were talking to him.komenstanto:What you need to find is some old rich guy who really hates his family and wants to screw them over in his will by giving his fortune away to some crazy cause.
Here is a list of rich and "smart" Deutsche Bank employees. Maybe they will give us some money if we "hit" them up:
That "crazy cause" could be Esperanto.
Americans who live in other lands sometimes send money to Mitt Romney as well.
sudanglo (Rodyti profilį) 2012 m. kovas 7 d. 10:07:07
Political parties collect such funds to promote their causes. The Esperanto movement is essentially a single-issue political party.
But I don't think that in its history the Esperanto movement has ever implemented such a levy on its adherents.
Fund raising, I think, has never been globally centralised and tends to be hypothecated, ie. for a specific project, or it is regional, like donations/subscriptions to the national association or local club.